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Browsing: Bird
An image of Bird remaining in the middle, sitting on the covers and surrounded by spectators, not only foreshadowed some of the events that would follow, but also his closeness to the cricketing public who appreciated his good-humoured nature.
In 1988, with England taking on West Indies at Headingley, Bird had to deal with play being halted by water oozing from under the outfield. With the Yorkshire crowd keen to make their frustration known, Bird left the field, telling them: “I can’t help it if there’s a burst pipe. There’s water coming up. It’s not my fault, that.”
Again it was West Indies as England’s opponents, this time in 1995, when Bird led the players from the field at Old Trafford because bright sunlight was reflecting into the middle and causing a distraction. “There’s something shining inside your box,” Bird shouted towards the posh seats as he once more took the ire of the crowd.
The chaotic moments took nothing away from the respect Bird commanded as an official. If anything, they helped to grow his reputation. He was chosen to stand in the first three World Cup finals, all held at Lord’s, in 1975, 1979 and 1983. The 1975 final, won by Clive Lloyd’s West Indians, provided one of Bird’s most famous stories.
When fans invaded the pitch after the Windies defeated Australia by 17 runs, Bird’s famous white hat – specially made by a firm in Luton – was taken from his head.
“I was on a London bus some years after,” Bird told the Test Match Special podcast in June of this year.
“I don’t know what I was doing on a London bus, but I saw a bus conductor with a white cap that looked like one of mine.
“I said ‘Excuse me, man, where did you get that white cap?’. He said ‘Haven’t you heard of Mr Dickie Bird, I pinched it off his head in the 1975 World Cup final!’.”
Beloved by players, even those frustrated by his reluctance to give lbw decisions, Bird was also the subject of countless pranks.
Once, when Bird was standing, former England batter Allan Lamb came to the middle. Perhaps with some artistic licence, Bird claimed that Lamb had forgotten to leave his mobile phone in the dressing room, and persuaded the umpire to look after it for him. This was in the days when mobile phones were not particularly small and not easily ignored.
In an oft-repeated story, Bird said he was at square leg when the phone rang. He answered and a familiar voice boomed down the line.
“This is Ian Botham in the dressing room. Tell that fella Lamb to play some shots or get out.”
When Bird ended his career as an international umpire in 1996, his 66 Tests was then a world record. He was given a guard of honour by the players of England and India as he stepped on to the Lord’s outfield for his final Test.
With tears in his eyes, famous not-outer Bird proceeded to give a marginal lbw against England captain Michael Atherton in the first over of the match.
Even in retirement, Bird’s celebrity status remained undiminished. He released bestselling books and became a fixture on the speaking circuit.
After being awarded an MBE in 1986, he was given an OBE in 2012. In an interview with the Telegraph in 2023, Bird revealed he met Queen Elizabeth II on 29 occasions, saying that the two wrote to each other frequently.
Always worried about being late, Bird was once invited to a 1pm lunch at Buckingham Palace and arrived at the gates at 8.45am.
Bird was immortalised by a statue in Barnsley in 2009, albeit the statue had to be lifted above ground level four years later because his raised umpiring finger would regularly be adorned with rude objects.
Bird never married, instead saying he was married to cricket. “The one thing I’ve missed is not having a family,” he said. “I think I’d have made a good father. But I’ve seen so many divorces in cricket, and I’m the kind of chap, it would have killed me if I’d had a broken marriage. That’s why I never married.”
He remained a constant presence at Headingley, where he paid for a balcony outside the dressing room for the players to sit and watch the game. Both the balcony and a clock at the ground bear his name.
Those tangible memories will endure as part of the legacy of one of British sport’s great characters. Dickie Bird remains one of the most famous cricketing figures the UK has ever produced without ever making a run for England.
Among those to pay tribute to Bird was former Prime Minister David Cameron who said: “He was a national treasure and I was fortunate to have shared some hugely enjoyable times with him over the years.
“At 92 he had a good innings. Farewell friend.”
Bird’s sister Marjorie Wyatt said: “Dickie was always proud of putting Barnsley on the map – he was Barnsley through and through.
“He was very caring and used to bring us home souvenirs.
“I would wash his cricket whites and his famous white flat cap, and he always appreciated that they would be immaculate and he would be turned out the best.
“What I will remember most about him was that he was always good at making decisions!”
Former England captain David Gower said Bird will be “remembered as one of the best umpires ever to take the field”.
“He certainly set himself high standards as an umpire, but that smile on his face at all times – whether he’s giving you out or not out, whatever he was doing out in the middle – you just knew that Dickie was in the place that he loved best,” Gower told the BBC.
“He was just a very, very good umpire. He had a sense of humour. He had the ability in his own very quirky and slightly barmy way of being able to get on with everyone.
“Everyone respected him immensely for what he was on the field, and he was the most likeable man off it.
“Umpiring gave him the opportunity to stay in the game that he’d loved from childhood.”
Boycott said: “When I was 15 and taken to Barnsley Cricket Club by my Uncle Algy, I was in awe of him because every week Dickie was the star batsman and he made a half-century to get a collection.
“He was a very good technical batsman but nerves got the better of him when he stepped up to play for Yorkshire and he could never quite hold down a place in the first team.
“When he became a first-class umpire he was absolutely brilliant. He made light of his nerves – even channelled them into making a success of umpiring.
“Players all over the world respected and admired him for his firmness, fairness, and he did it with a sense of humour.”
Former England captain Kevin Pietersen described Bird as an “absolute legend of English cricket”.
“May you rest in peace knowing that you were loved by all,” Pietersen said. “I had so many amazing moments with Dickie. A remarkable character that will be missed dearly!”